Documenting CE

Time Frame to earn CE

CORE Maintenance Time Frames to earn CE

Only CE earned after taking the specialty assessment can be used to maintain certification. It must meet the CE needed in the educational plan and have been earned during your current three year period of certification.

The specialty assessment is used to develop each individualized educational plan. Once the educational plan is developed CE can be earned to meet the educational needs. Only CE earned after the specialty assessment and within the three year maintenance cycle can be used to maintain.

Your specific dates are in your maintenance application. An individual may open and close their online application, tracking completed and needed CE activities as earned.

Maintenance cycles are three years. CE can be earned from the time the specialty assessment is taken to the individual's maintenance due date. If you take the assessment early, before your cycle starts, the first day you can earn CE to apply to your maintenance is the first day of your new maintenance cycle.

Maintenance due dates will now be on the 15th of the month instead of the end of the month. This is effective January 1, 2016. Maintenance due dates will fall on one of the below quarterly due dates for all those certified, including the RNC-E. The month you are due will not change but the date you are due will now be on the 15th of the month.

March 15thJune 15thSeptember 15thDecember 15th

CE Time Frames for Legacy and Subspecialty Maintenance

Continuing Education must be earned during your current three year period of holding your credential. Maintenance due dates are the 15th of the month in March, June, September or December. You date is found in your account.

Acceptable CE - browse keywords

For core certifications: The amount and nature of the CE required to maintain is specified on the education plan that you will receive after taking Specialty Assessment.

For Core Legacy certifications: for certifications no longer offered by NCC The requirement is 45 CE hours in your certification specialty.

For subspecialty certifications: The requirement is 15 CE hours in your subspecialty area.

Acceptable CE for maintenance reflects the content tested on certification examinations. The maintenance process is determining if you have maintained those same core competencies over time. To determine if the CE you have earned or planned to take is acceptable for maintenance review the guide to Is My CE Acceptable. This provides a list of the core competencies and keyword topics associated with each certification specialty. The core competencies are broad and comprehensive and keywords are not exhaustive so you need to use your own judgment in determining applicability. This process has not changed from previous years, though the categories are now aligned with the continuing competency assessment core competencies.

Specialty Codes for CE activities

The Is My CE Acceptable guide will provide you with the specialty codes for all applicable content. In addition, there is a coding brochure for each core certification specialty that outlines the codes, core competencies and appropriate CE for each. For access to the brochures, return to the Certification Maintenance page.

Special Considerations

Courses that are mixed content or cover wide variance of populations

For mixed population focused activities, record only those hours that apply to the population focus of the certification area. For example, If a physical exam course is taken that is neonatal and pediatric-focused, only the hours for neonatal content could be used for maintenance of the NNP certification. The number of hours in the CE activity would have to be estimated that were devoted to neonatal content.

Program/activities that cover multiple core competencies but assign only total hours

You will have to estimate the hours for each code. For example, if the program covered 3 codes and was worth 12 hours, you can assign 4 hours for each code or you can estimate the time for each code by assessing the amount of time devoted to the content related to an individual code. The estimate cannot exceed the total hours. You would list the program one time with total hours earned and then check box to apply hours to multiple Core Competency areas. Enter the hours earned for each code.

Program/activities that cover multiple core competencies and are identified by the CE provider

List the activity and hours earned in total. Then assign hours earned for each code. The total of hours assigned to each core competency cannot exceed the total hours awarded for the activity or program. For example, if the activity was 5 hours and 3 hours were assigned to pharmacology and 2 hours to pathophysiology, you would list the activity once, check the box to apply hours to multiple Core Competency areas, and enter 3 hours for pharmacology and 2 hours to pathophysiology.

Generic courses

The course has to relate to the population focus of the certification area. A course on hypertension in pregnancy could not be used to maintain neonatal certifications but would be acceptable for maintaining WHNP certification.

Specialty focused conventions like AWHONN or NANN

Use the specialty code that represents the specialty area of most of the presentations attended or if specific specialty content is needed, record only the sessions/presentations that are associated with that the code and the corresponding hours.

Universal Hours

Universal hours are no longer applicable, as they have been incorporated into the existing competencies. For Legacy core certifications, they are still used.

Activities other than CE

Being an author, a CE presenter or preceptor can be applied for maintenance. There are limits to the number of hours that they can be assigned - view the maintenance catalog for details but these hours can only apply if you have baseline hours in your education plan. These are hours that can be assigned to any core competency area and show at the bottom of your plan. These types of hours cannot be applied for subspecialty certificates such as EFM or NPT.

Academic credit

Program/activity: Course 301 Pathophysiology of the Newborn Date of program: 9/30/14 (list the date you finished the program) Number of hours: List in CE hours, see conversion formulas in the maintenance catalogs Sponsoring/accrediting organization: University of Chicago Specialty code that matches content of the course: varies

All content must be related to your certification specialty according to core competency addressed in the course content

NCC CE Modules

NCC CE module users will have their CE information automatically posted and coded to their online maintenance application upon successful completion. Please note that you cannot change the code on the CE modules and you cannot use a module for maintenance that is not coded in your specialty.

Preceptorship Hours

Program/activity: Preceptor of WHNP students for University of Massachusetts clinical rotation in obstetrics Date of program: 12/31/14 (list the date when you finished precepting.) Number of hours: maximum that can be used is 10 hours Sponsoring/accrediting organization: University of Massachusetts Specialty code that matches preceptorship: Code 24

For an author

Program/activity: Chapter 12 on Oral Contraceptives in Comprehensive Gyn Date of program: 3/31/15 (list the date the work was published) Number of hours: maximum that can be used is 10 hoursSponsoring/accrediting organization: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins Specialty code that matches the author option: Code 25